Record rainfall / severe storms / snow?

The total precipitation in Okarche on February 3rd was 0.70 of an inch. This set a record for the date… beating out 0.10 of an inch set in 1990.

The beneficial rainfall – which temporarily puts us above normal for the year – came from a strong storm system which moved into the plains late on the 2nd and through the day on the 3rd.

Thunderstorms became severe in northwest Oklahoma during the early morning hours of the 3rd… producing hail up to quarter size and wind gusts to near 65 MPH. There were several small circulations noted on radar with the storms… and it wouldn’t be surprising if a few tornadic spin-ups occurred.

Severe thunderstorms redeveloped during the afternoon and produced hail near golfball size in Seminole. Hail larger than golfball size occurred near Sherman, Texas.

On the cold side of things… a full blown blizzard didn’t materialize – however, very heavy snowfall has occurred in Colorado and is spreading eastward across Nebraska and Iowa. Some snowfall totals in the central plains are expected to exceed a foot.

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We have enjoyed much warmer than normal temperatures during the past few weeks. This is coming to an end for a few days as cooler air heads south out of Canada and we return to seasonable normals.

Latest model guidance suggests an unusual evolving weather pattern. The system that is coming through the plains currently will leave a piece of energy over the central Rockies which will eject eastward across Oklahoma on Tuesday (7th). If this occurs, it may produce light / but accumulating / snowfall across the state. Because this is so many days out – and the system is somewhat of a strange evolution – I’m not counting on this being a snow event at this time. Something to watch….

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